Chatoyance In Damascus
#1
Posted 14 July 2010 - 01:59 PM
Journeyman Smith
#2
Posted 16 July 2010 - 07:36 AM
I get the most chatoyance by disrupting the pattern when the layer count is 400 or above and the disruptions being rather close together and sharp. Beyond that I believe it to be affected by the type of finish that is on the steel. Lin
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#3
Posted 16 July 2010 - 11:20 AM
Lin Rhea, on 16 July 2010 - 07:36 AM, said:
I get the most chatoyance by disrupting the pattern when the layer count is 400 or above and the disruptions being rather close together and sharp. Beyond that I believe it to be affected by the type of finish that is on the steel. Lin
Hi Lin, Thanks for the helpful info,i had been considering making a set of ladder dies out of triangular bar stock instead of the gear rack dies I now use, with your info on the closeness of the disruptions i will now try to find smaller stock than I had previously considered. Do you think cut in patterns work better for this than pressed in? Thanks again for the help. kinzea
Journeyman Smith
#4
Posted 16 July 2010 - 01:27 PM
I have cut in most of mine, but I know some of the guys press theirs in and get great shimmering effect. I think some of the subtle differences in method may make a difference and who can say what the next guys will look like untill he puts his spin on it? Lin
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#5
Posted 17 July 2010 - 07:46 PM
For the shimmering chatoyance, simply rub down the same blade with fine steel wool. I use a plain old SOS Pad between etchings in ferric chloride. The effect is instantaneous. The shimmering happens immediately. You won't have the high-contrast black & white I mentioned above, but in 300-400 layer patterns the effect can be almost holographic. That's all there is to it. If you don't like the shimmering, just etch it again for a minute or two and do the sanding for the 2000 grit traditional finish.
Cheers,
TV
Terry Vandeventer
ABS MS
#6
Posted 18 July 2010 - 02:39 PM
Use your hand hammers as much as possible when forging your blade to shape, especially when you still have a lot of "meat" left in the steel.
While you still have your beginning bar, even before forging your profile, you can simply go berserk with a ball pein hammer and "upset" the layers as much as possible with a zillion pock marks on the bar.
Then forge the bar back flat on your press or power hammer,. but the upsetting you have just done is still there and will reveal itself in the etch.
There is no chatoyance more predominant or beautiful that that which is forged in.
When forging your blade tapers, really hit your blade sides a LOT! with your hammers while you still have plenty of steel to flatten back out.
Also, don't clean the scale off your blade when forging, but rather let it get all crusted up with scale and forge that in, which also helps to distort the layers.
It'll grind out later.
Just do anything you can to beat that steel into next week!
Journeyman Smith
#7
Posted 18 July 2010 - 03:57 PM
Karl B. Andersen, on 18 July 2010 - 02:39 PM, said:
Use your hand hammers as much as possible when forging your blade to shape, especially when you still have a lot of "meat" left in the steel.
While you still have your beginning bar, even before forging your profile, you can simply go berserk with a ball pein hammer and "upset" the layers as much as possible with a zillion pock marks on the bar.
Then forge the bar back flat on your press or power hammer,. but the upsetting you have just done is still there and will reveal itself in the etch.
There is no chatoyance more predominant or beautiful that that which is forged in.
When forging your blade tapers, really hit your blade sides a LOT! with your hammers while you still have plenty of steel to flatten back out.
Also, don't clean the scale off your blade when forging, but rather let it get all crusted up with scale and forge that in, which also helps to distort the layers.
It'll grind out later.
Just do anything you can to beat that steel into next week!
Thanks for the input Terry and Karl, you raise some ideas I hadn't considered. Terry I usually finish my damascus as you describe but I will certainly try the all bright look, might be interesting. Karl I have already been accused of beating my steel into next week, i just wasnt told it was a good thing, seriously, those are some good points about predistortion with the hammer,not getting rid of the scale I might have to work at. Thanks again Kinzea L Thompson
Journeyman Smith
#8
Posted 20 July 2010 - 03:08 PM
Master Smith
#9
Posted 13 October 2010 - 04:43 AM
I have to run to work, but if I have time I'll see if I can put together a drawing that illustrates what I'm talking about.
-d

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